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#41 |
Elite Waterdeep Guard
![]() Join Date: June 11, 2003
Location: Ohio
Age: 52
Posts: 30
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I think cats and dogs are equally smart. You can't teach a cat tricks simply because it doesn't care, there more indepenant. While a dog will jump though any hoop for approval.
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#42 | |
Iron Throne Cult
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#43 | |
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Quote:
So says the [img]graemlins/choc.gif[/img] [/QUOTE]what im talkin' about is the potential of the brain.the brain is an unbelievable part of the body.only a slight people realizes the true power of a brain.size does matter.people with big heads sometmes are less intelligence compared to people with smaller heads, is because of they cant use their brain effectively, and also genetics is also the factor that determines how living things can use its brain. quoting someones else post:and about whales, yes the have big body size, but that doesn't mean that they have bigger brains. -------------------- |
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#44 |
Symbol of Cyric
![]() Join Date: November 12, 2002
Location: Banstead, Southeast England
Age: 38
Posts: 1,162
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Erm...if a whale's heart is the size of a car, I doubt the brain is smaller than a human one. Lots of animals are "smarter" than us instinctive-wise anyway, as we've become so...I dunno...non-instinctive. [img]tongue.gif[/img] We "think" rather than listen to the instinctive side of our brain. Of course, some of them can't be buried, like reflexes.
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#45 |
Fzoul Chembryl
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Age: 55
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Comparing cats to dogs and asking which is smarter is like comparing apples to oranges and asking which is better tasting. It's a subjective question and depends on how you look at it. Cats and dogs are programmed quite differently. Domestic house cats come from a stock of animals that were solitary carnivores. Dogs come from a stock of social omnivores. Dogs can taste and digest various sugars while cats need primarily protein and fats in their diets. Because of the need to process information from social intereaction, dog's brains are geared to learn more effectively in a social setting with dominant animals than cats. If you're looking at the animals as a species, social omnivores tend to be more able to succeed where solitary carnivores cannot because of their flexibility. Also, dogs possess voracious appetites, cast iron stomachs, and they'll eat anything even remotely edible. They're able to scrounge food almost anywhere. This makes them very environmentally flexible. In truth though, all cats and dogs have been domesticated for a long time, so this probably doesn't apply to pets. Does the social aspect make dogs "better" or "smarter"? Not necessarily. Just better at what they do.
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